The usual phrases: unique perspective, never before seen footage, in-depth interviews, home movies, private photos . . . the usual.

Immigrant parents of Polish and Jewish descent, financial hardship, he wrote multi-award beauties like “The Crucible,” “Death of a Salesman,” “A View From the Bridge,” “All My Sons.” In between he also married Marilyn Monroe.

Rebecca, who knows from special men — her husband is Daniel Day-Lewis — says: “I have 200 hours of home footage back to the ’50s.

“My father wrote every day. My late mother [Arthur’s third wife, Inge Morath] would fix breakfast, then coffee, then he’d edit something, then pop in and out. It was upstate. I was very young. He was fun, playful.

“The culture in which he wrote expanded his conscience. And the women in his life? All the major influences were reflected. Like telling Marilyn, ‘You’re the saddest girl I ever met.’ In his movie ‘The Misfits,’ with Marilyn and Clark Gable, you heard that exact phrase.

“Early life formed his writing of people in struggles. He’d investigate the mystery of their character. The origin of that famous character Willy Loman?

Its inspiration was his Uncle Manny.

“The Depression was a seismic event in my father’s life. To him, writing dealt with survival. Social conscience. Injustice to the world. He drew from letters, journals. Committed to liberal causes, his plays were about human beings caught in the system.”

Does Rebecca have any personal souvenir of her father?

“I kept one of his pipes.”

RIP, dear designer

It was after hunting wardrobe for her film “Sabrina” that Audrey Hepburn said this about Hubert de Givenchy, whom we just lost: “Two days before holding their fashion shows, Balenciaga, Dior, Chanel were all shut. Paris’ newest and youngest designer was Givenchy, who was just then starting out. He helped me himself and found the famous black-and-white dress I wore in that movie. Soon I became able to afford to buy his clothes.”

On Pop TV, whateverthehell that is. Filming in London, of which I have definitely heard.

One lady’s take on #MeToo era

A supersuccessful well-known Hollywood female executive: “Of course we’re stunned at the accusations. Some had the ring of truth. A fact is people under 40 think differently than those over 40. Older ones didn’t suffer repeat horror stories of rape and masturbation. They knew how to handle a pass. Maybe because they went to work dressed like nuns — suits, high-necked sweaters.

“Did most guys eff around? Of course. But now suddenly a person’s accused. Now instantaneously he’s guilty. Now immediately he’s fired.

“It’s frustrating because now I’m terrified to say anything like this publicly. A young crowd today will stone me.”

Oue mayor gives us good news.

He says crime is down by a large percent. But we’re New Yorkers. There’s nothing we can’t do. Our crooks and muggers will just have to try harder.